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Tuesday, October 16, 2012

In reading the Bhagavad-Gita, many of you in Western countries may have felt astonished at the second chapter, wherein Shri Krishna calls Arjuna a hypocrite and a coward because of his refusal to fight or offer resistance on account of his adversaries being his friends and relatives, making the plea that non-resistance was the highs ideal of love. This is a great lesson for us all to learn, that in all matters the two extremes are alike; the extreme positive and the extreme negative are always similar; when the vibrations of light are too slow we don not see them, nor do we see them when they are too rapid. So with sound; when very low in pitch we do not hear it, when very high we do not hear it either. Of like nature is the difference between resistance and no-resistance. One man does not resist because he is weak, lazy, and cannot, not because he will not; the other man knows that he can strike an irresistible blow if he likes; yet he not only does not strike, but blesses his enemies. The one who from weakness resist not commits a sin, and as such cannot receive any benefit from the non-resistance;
while the other would commit a sin by offering resistance.

Buddha gave up his throne and renounced his position; that was true renunciation. But there cannot be any question of renunciation in the case of a beggar who has nothing to renounce. So we must always be careful about what we really mean when we speak of this non-resistance and ideal love. We must first take care to understand whether we have the power of resistance or not. Then, having the power, if we renounce it and do not resist, we are doing a grand act of love; but if we cannot resist, and yet, at the same time, try to deceive ourselves into the belief that we are actuated by motives of the highs love, we are doing the exact opposite. Arjuna became a coward at the sight of the mighty array against him; his “love” made him forgets his duty towards his country and king. That is why Shri Krishna told him that he was a hypocrite: thou talkest like a wise man, but thy actions betray thee to be a coward; therefore stand up and fight!

Friday, October 5, 2012

To exemplify: All great teachers have taught “Resist not evil”, that non – resistance is the maximum moral ideal. We all know that if a certain number of us attempted to put that maxim fully into practice, the whole social fabric would fall to pieces; the wicked would take possession of our properties and our lives, and would do whatever they liked with us. Even if for only on day such non – resistance were practiced, it would lead to disaster. Yet, spontaneously, in our heart of hearts we feel the truth of the teaching, “Resist not evil “. This seems to us be the highest ideal; yet to teach this doctrine only would be equivalent to condemning a vast portion of mankind. Not only so, it would be making men feel that they were always doing wrong, and cause in them scruples of conscience in all their actions; it would weaken them, and that constant self-disapproval would breed more vice than any other weakness would.

To the man who has begun to hate himself the gate to deterioration has already opened; and the same is true of a nation.
Our first duty is not to hate ourselves; because to advance we must have faith in ourselves first and then in God. He who has no faith in himself can never have faith in God. Therefore the only substitute remaining to us is to recognize that duty and morality vary under different circumstances; not that the man who resists evil is doing what is always and in itself wrong, but that in the different circumstances in which he is placed it may become even his duty to resist evil.

Thursday, October 4, 2012

In every man there are these three forces. Sometimes tames succeed. We become lazy, we cannot move, we are motionless, bound down by certain ideas or by sheer dullness. At other times activity prevails, and at still other times that calm harmonizing of both. Again, in different men, one of these forces is generally prevalent. The characteristic of one man is inactivity, dullness, and indolence; that of another, activity, power we find the sweetness, calmness, and gentleness which are due to the balancing of both are due to the balancing of both action and inaction. So in animals, plants, and men-we find the more or less typical manifestation of all these different forces.

Karma-yoga and its factors

Karma-yoga has specially to deal with these three factors. By teaching what they are and how to occupy them, it helps us to do our work better. Human society is a ranking organization. We all know about duty, but at the same time we find that in different countries the significance of morality varies greatly. What is considered as moral in any country, for oyster is painstaking perfectly immoral. For instance, in one country cousins may marry; in another, it is thought to be very immoral in one , men may marry their sisters-in – law in another, it is regarded as immoral in one country people may marry only once in another, many times and so forth. Similarly, in all other departments of morality we find the standard varies greatly yet we have the idea that there must be a universal standard of morality.

So it is with sense of duty. The idea of duty varies much among different nations. In one country if a man does not certain things, people will say he has acted wrongly, while if he does those very things in another country, people will say that he did not act rightly – and yet we know that there must be some universal idea of duty in the same way, one class of society thinks that certain things are among its duty, while another class thinks quite the opposite and would be horror-struck if it had to do those things. Two ways are left open to us – the way of the ignorant who think that there is only one way to truth and that all the rest are wrong, and the way of the wise who admit that, according to our mental constitution or the different planes of existence in which we are , duty and morality may vary . The important thing is to know that there are gradations of duty of morality that the duty of one state of life, in one set of circumstances, will not and cannot be that of another.

Leave the fruits lonely. Way care for results: If you wish to help a man, never think what that man’s approach should be towards you. If you want to do a great or a good work, do not trouble to think what the result will be.

There arises a tricky question in this ideal of work. Intense activity is compulsory: we must always work. We cannot live a minute without work. What then becomes of rest? Here is one side of the life-struggle—work, in which we are whirled rapidly round. And here is the other, that of calm, retiring renunciation; everything is peaceful around, there is very little of noise and show, only nature with her animals and flowers and mountains. Neither of them is a perfect picture. A man used to isolation, if brought in contact with the surging whirlpool of the world, will be compressed by it: just as the fish that lives in the deep sea water, as soon as it is brought to the surface, breaks into pieces, deprived of the weight of water on it that had kept it together. C and a man who has been used to the turmoil and thrush of life live at ease if he comes to a quiet place? He suffers and conceivably may lose his mind. The ideal man is he who in the midst of the greatest silence and solitude finds the in tensest activity, and in the midst of the in tensest activity finds the peace and solitude of the desert. He has learnt the secret of restraint, he has controlled himself. He goes through the streets of a big city with all its traffic, and his mind is as calm as if he were in a cave where not a sound could reach him; and he is intensely working all the time. That is the ideal of Karma-Yoga; and if you have attained to that, you have really learn the secret of work.

But we have to begin from the commencement, to take up the works as they come to use and slowly make ourselves more magnanimous every day. We must do the works and find out the motive power that prompts us; and, almost without exception, in the first that our motives are always selfish; but gradually this selfishness will melt by doggedness, till at last will come the time when we shall be able to do really unselfish work, we may all hope that someday or other, as we fight back through the paths of life, there will come a time when we shall become perfectly unselfish; and the moment we attain to that, all powers will be concentrated, and the Knowledge which is ours will be manifest. ACCORDING to Sankhya philosophy, nature is composed of three forces called, in Sanskrit, Sativa, Rajas and Tames. These as discernible in the physical world are what we may call equilibrium, activity, and inertness. Tames is typified as darkness or inactivity; Tames is typified as darkness or inactivity; rajas is activity, expressed as attraction or repulsion; and sativa is the equilibrium of the two.

Saturday, July 28, 2012

Man works with various motives; there cannot be works without motive. Some people want to get fame, and they work for fame. Others want money, and they work for money. Others want to have power, and they work for power. Others want to get to leave a name when they die, as they do in China where no man gets a title until he is dead; and that is a better way, after all, than with us. When a man does something very good there, they give a title of nobility to his father who is dead, or to his grandfather. Some people work for that. Some of the followers of certain Mohammedan sects work all their lives to have a big tomb built for them when they die.

Motives of Men

I Know sects among whom, as soon as a child is born, a tomb is prepared for it; that is among them the most important work a man has to do, and the bigger and the finer the tomb, the better off the man is supposed to be. Others work as a penance; do all sorts of wicked things, them erect a temple, or give something to the priests to buy them off and obtain from them a passport to heaven. They think that this kind of beneficence will clear them and they will go scot-free in spite of their sinfulness such are some of the various motives for work.

All this is strong-minded by Karma, work No one can get anything unless he earns it; this is an eternal law. We may sometimes think it is not so, but in the long run we become convinced of it. A man may struggle all his life for riches; he may cheat thousands, but he finds at last that he did not deserved to become rich, and his life becomes a trouble and a nuisance to him. We may go on accumulating things for our physical enjoyment, but only what we earn is really ours, a fool may buy all the books in the world, and they will be in his library, but he will be able to read only those that he deserves to; and this deserving is produced by Karma. Our Karma determines what we deserve and what we can assimilate. We are responsible for what we are; and whatever we wish ourselves to be, we have the power to make ourselves.

Result of our own past actions

If what we are now has been the result of our own past actions, it future can be produced by our present actions; so we have to know how to act. You will say, “What is the use of learning how to work! Everyone works in some way or other in this worked.” But there is such a thing as frittering away our energies. With regard to Karma –Yoga, the Gita says that it is doing work with cleverness and as a science: by knowing how to work, one can obtain the greatest results. You must remember that all works is simply to bring out the power of the mind which is already there, to wake up the soul. The power is inside every man, so is Knowledge; the different works are like blows to bring them out, to cause these giants to wake up.

All the actions that we see in the world, all the movements in human society, all the works that we have around us, are simply the works that we have around us, are simply the display of thought, the manifestation of the will of man. Machines or instruments, cities, ships or men-of- war, all these are simply the manifestation of the will of man; and this will is caused by character and character is manufactured by Karma. As is Karma, so is the manifestation of the will. The men of mighty will the world has produced have all been tremendous workers- gigantic souls with wills powerful enough to overturn words, wills they got by persistent work through ages and ages.

Buddha or a Jesus

Such a gigantic will as that of a Buddha or a Jesus could not be obtained in one life, for we know who their fathers were. It is not Known that their fathers ever spoke a word for the good of mankind. Millions and millions are still living Millions and millions of petty Kings like Buddha’s father had been in the world. If it was only a case of hereditary transmission, how do you account for this petty prince who was not, perhaps, obeyed by his own servants, producing this son whom half a world worships! How do you explain the gulf between the carpenter and his son whom millions of human beings worship as God! It cannot be solved by the theory of heredity .The gigantic will which Buddha and Jesus threw over the world, whence did it come! Whence came this accumulation of power! It must have been there through ages and ages, continually growing bigger and bigger, until it burst on society in a Buddha or a Jesus, even rolling down to the present day.

Judge The Character of a Man

There are assured works which are, as it were, the collective, the sum total, of a large number of smaller works. If we stand near the seashore and hear the waves dashing against the shingle, we think it is such a great noise; and yet we Know that one wave is really poised of millions and millions of minute waves, Each one of these is making a noise, and yet we do not catch it; it is only when they become the big aggregate that we hear. Similarly, every pulsation of the heart is work; certain kinds of work we feel and they become tangible to us; they are, at the same time, the aggregate of a number of small works. If you really want to judge the character of a man, look not at his great performances. Every hoodwink may become a hero at one time or another. Those are indeed the thing which will tell you the real character of a great man. Great occasions rouse even the lowest of human beings to some kind of greatness, but he alone is the really great man whose temperament is great always, the same wherever he is.

Friday, July 27, 2012

Omniscient Men

There have been omniscient men, and I judge, there will be yet; and that there will be myriad of them in the cycles to come. Like fire in a piece of flint, knowledge exists in the mind; suggestion is the friction which brings it out. So with all our feelings and actions- our tears and our smiles, our joys and our grief’s, our weeping ad our laughter, our curses and our blessings, our praises and our blames__every one of these we may been brought out from within ourselves by so many blows. The result is what we are. All these blows taken together are called Karma__works, action. Every mental and physical blow that is given to the soul, by which, as it were, fire is struck from it, and by which its own power and knowledge are discovered, is Karma, this word being used in its widest sense; thus we are all doing Karma all the time. I am talking to you: that is Karama. You are listening: that is Karma. We breathe: that is Karma. We walk: Karma. Everything we do, physical or mental, are Karma, and it Leaves its marks on us.

The Falling of an Apple

The falling of an apple gave the proposition to Newton, and he studied his own mind. He rearranged to Newton, and he studied his own mind. He rearranged all the previous links of thought in his mind and discovered a new link among them, which we call the law of gravitation. It was neither in the apple nor in anything in the centre of the earth. All knowledge, therefore, secular or spiritual, is in the human mind. In many cases it is not discovered but remains covered, and when the covering is being slowly taken off we say, “We are learning”, and the advance of knowledge is made by the advance of this process of uncovering. The man from whom this veil is being lifted is the more knowing man; the man upon whom it lies thick is ignorant; and the man from whom it has completely gone is all-knowing, omniscient.

Knowledge Inherent In Man

Now this knowledge, again, is inherent in man. No knowledge comes from outside; it is all inside,. What we say a man “knows” should, in strict psychological language, be what he “discovers” or “unveils”, what a man “learns” is really what he “discovers”, by taking the over off his own soul, which is a mine of infinite knowledge. We say Newton discovered gravitation. Was it sitting anywhere in a corner waiting for him? It was in his own mind; the time came and he found it out. All facts that the world has waver received comes from the mind; the infinite library of the universe is in your own mind. The external world is simply the suggestion, the occasion, which sets you to study your own mind, but the object of your study is always your own mind.

Thursday, July 26, 2012

What is Karma Yoga?

The word Karma is derived from the Sanskrit Kris, to do; all action is Karamu. Technically, this word also means the effects of actions. In connection with metaphysics, it sometimes means section with metaphysics; it sometimes means the effects, of which our past actions were the causes. But in Karma-Yoga we have simply to do with the word Karma as meaning work. The goal of mankind is knowledge. That is the one ideal placed before us by Eastern Philosophy. Pleasure is not the goal of man, but knowledge. Pleasure and happiness come to an end. It is a mistake to suppose that pleasure is the goal. The cause of all the miseries we have in the world is that men foolishly think pleasure to be the ideal to strive for.

After a time man finds that it is not happiness, but knowledge, towards which he is going, and that both pleasure and pain are great teachers; and that he learns as much from evil as from good. As pleasure and pain pass before his soul, they leave upon it different pictures and the result of these combined imitations is what is called man’s “character”. If you take the character of any man, it really is but the affricate of tendencies, the sum total of the bent of his mind; you will find that misery and happiness are equal factors in the formation of that character. Good and evil have an equal share in molding character, and in some instances misery is a greater teacher than happiness. In studying the great characters the world had produced, I dare say, in the vast majority of cases it would be found that it was misery that taught more than happiness, it was poverty that taught more than wealth, it was blows that brought out their inner fire more than praise.